The Green Party in Northern Ireland is a green party in Northern Irelandwhich works in co-operation with green parties across Britain and Ireland, Europe and globally. Like many green parties around the world, its origins lie in the anti-nuclear, labour and peace movements of the 1970s and early 1980s.

The Green Party campaigns not just for more environmental protection but also for politics for the common good. MLASteven Agnew has championed the rights of children in Northern Ireland through his Private Member’s Bill which is seeking to establish a statutory duties on government departments to work together to deliver optimum children’s services. Agnew has also been a long-standing supporter of integrated education and a society based on equal rights and mutual respect for all traditions. This has included bringing forward the first motion on same-sex marriage to the Northern Ireland Assembly in 2011. The party has also called for funding to be focused on improving public transport infrastructure and supports the creation of an independent environmental protection agency for Northern Ireland. They also campaign for a shift toalternative energy for Northern Ireland and were involved in the setting up of a lobby group for the sector. The Green Party in Northern Ireland campaigns for transparency in political funding, responsive local government, effective community planning, dynamic and sustainable local economies, environmental protection, and for animal welfare.

On the constitutional status of Northern Ireland, the Green Party believes the status quo should remain “until the people of Northern Ireland decide otherwise”.[8] The party has also called for greater transparency in politics, arguing that political donations in Northern Ireland should be made public. Northern Ireland is the only part of the United Kingdom where political donations are secret.[9]

In the Northern Ireland local elections of May 1981, Peter Emerson, Avril McCandless and Malcolm Samuels stood as the first candidates to use the Ecology label in Northern Ireland and gained 202, 81 and 61 votes respectively; the first in a large urban area, the other two in smaller rural constituencies. Emerson had previously stood in the same area in 1977.[10]

In May 1983, the Northern Ireland Ecology Party was launched at a press conference held in the Europa Hotel, Belfast, with members of the British and Irish Ecology parties in attendance. At the same time, the three parties put forward one combined policy on Northern Ireland, the first time that UK and Irish political parties had held a common Northern Ireland policy.

In 1985, ecology parties throughout the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom changed their names to Green Party.

The party became a region of the Green Party of Ireland in 2006.[3][4] These arrangements are said to demonstrate the Northern Ireland party’s cross-community nature, as the Green Party claim to be the only party that actually lives the Good Friday Agreement through its operational set up through North-South and East-West links.[citation needed]

In 2007, a Green society was established at Queen’s University Belfast.[11] In 2010, the LGBT Greens NI were established: a policy group and lobby group specialising in LGBT community issues within Northern Ireland. The LGBT group dissolved in early 2012, as their main aim — pushing for the inclusion of same-sex marriage within party policy — was achieved at the 2011 AGM after a unanimous vote.

In February 2015, the Queer Greens party group was set up to become the LGBTQ issues and activist wing of the party. The group is taking charge of party policy on LGBTQ issues, campaigning, lobbying and raising awareness.

On the 14th of January 2016, the party announced that it had selected Ellen Murray as its candidate to contest the 2016 Northern Ireland Assembly elections for West Belfast, making her the first openly Transgender person to stand for election on the island of Ireland.

In 2009, the Green Party stood Steven Agnew in the European election — he secured 15,674 votes, trebling the Green Party’s share of the vote.[4] The Greens fought the election on the Green New Deal, calling for job creation in the green energy sector.

The Greens fielded four candidates in the 2010 UK general election,[13] none of which managed to secure a seat. However, the number of votes for Green candidates more than trebled.

Brian Wilson MLA stood down ahead of the 2011 Assembly election,[14] in which the party won a seat on North Down council,[15] with their candidate Steven Agnew.[16] Agnew subsequently stepped down from his position on North Down Borough Council as the party took a strong stand against so called ‘double jobbing’ or dual mandate; he was replaced by John Barry.[15]

According to accounts filed with the Electoral Commission for the year ending December 31, 2009, the party had an income of about £90,230 that year, an expenditure of £61,165 and a membership of 1,072.[9] Within days of the Scottish Independence referendum being held, the membership swelled to more than 5,000.[10] Launching its manifesto for the 2015 General Election, the Scottish Green Party stated a membership of over 8,500.[11] By October 2015 the party were holding their biggest ever conference, with their membership standing at more than 9,000.[12]

The Scottish Green Party originated as the Scottish branch of the Ecology Party, founded in 1978 by Leslie Spoor.[13] The Ecology Party became the UKGreen Party and it remained a constituent party until 1990, when the Scottish Green Party became a separate entity. The separation was entirely amicable, as part of the green commitment to decentralisation: the Scottish Green Party supported the referendum on Scottish independence[citation needed] and opposed Britain’s entry into the European Common Market in its 1989 European election manifesto, claiming that the Common Market would causemass unemployment for Scottish workers, force Scotland to move towards atourist-based economy, enable the destruction of local food markets and cause catastrophic environmental damage – for this reason, the party campaigned for a Europe-wide confederation of individuals on global issues affecting the environment.[14]

In the 2007 elections, the Party lost five seats in Holyrood. However, in the council elections, taking place under the newSingle Transferable Vote voting system, they gained three Councillors on the City of Edinburgh Council and five Councillors on Glasgow City Council. On 11 May, the Greens signed an agreement[15] with the Scottish National Party, which meant that the Greens voted for Alex Salmond as First Minister and supported his initial Ministerial appointments. In return, the Nationalists backed a climate change bill as an early measure and promised to legislate against ship-to-ship oil transfers in the Firth of Forth. The SNP also agreed to nominate Patrick Harvie, one of the Green MSPs, to convene one of the Holyrood committees: Transport, Infrastructure and Climate Change.

On 28 January 2009, the two Green MSPs were instrumental in the defeat of the Government’s budget,[16] though a slightly amended version was passed easily the following week. On 31 May, Cllr Martin Ford, formerly a Liberal Democrat, joined the Scottish Green Party in protest against the plans by Donald Trump to develop on an important environmental site atMenie.[17] On 13 October 2009, he was joined by fellow former Liberal Democrat Cllr Debra Storr.[18] Both Councillors continued to serve on Aberdeenshire Council as members of the Democratic Independent group.[19] Councillor Debra Storr stood down at the 2012 Scottish local elections to concentrate on her professional career. Councillor Martin Ford was re-elected, this time standing as a Scottish Green Party candidate.

After the Scottish Government announced the referendum on Scottish independence, a campaign group called Yes Scotland was established to promote a vote for independence. Leading members of the Scottish Green Party actively supported and became involved with the campaign from its foundation, with Patrick Harvie among the members of Yes Scotland’s Advisory Board.[20] In November 2013, Edinburgh councillor Maggie Chapman succeeded Martha Wardrop as the party’s female co-convenor.[21] In December, former convenor Robin Harper said that he would “absolutely vote No” in the independence referendum and offered his backing to the Better Together campaign, putting himself at odds with official party policy and its present leadership. Going on to say that he would like to help the Better Together and that there was a “significant minority” of Greens who were opposed to independence.[22] Uniquely amongst the parties in the Scottish Parliament, the Scottish Green Party is open about and comfortable with the differences of opinion in the party on the constitutional issue, with co-convenor Patrick Harvie pointing out that “even the very firm supporters of independence within the Greens tend to be more strongly motivated by other aspects of our political agenda…”[23]

According to the party’s website, the Scottish Greens are committed to forming a sustainable society and are guided by four interconnected principles:

Ecology: Our environment is the basis upon which every society is formed. Whenever we damage our environment, we damage ourselves. Respect for our environment is therefore essential.

Equality: A society that is not socially and economically just cannot be sustainable. Only when released from immediatepoverty can individuals be expected to take responsibility for wider issues. Our society must be founded on cooperation and respect. We campaign hard against discrimination on grounds of gender, race, sexuality, disability, age or religion.

Radical Democracy: Politics is too often conducted in a polarised, confrontational atmosphere and in a situation remote from those that it affects. We must develop decentralised, participative systems that encourage individuals to control the decisions that affect their own lives.

Peace and Nonviolence: Violence at all levels of human interaction must be rejected and succeeded by relations characterised by flexibility, respect and fairness.

The party claims that, taken together, these principles give the party a holistic view that is in common with all Green partiesaround the world.[25]

Robin Harper for the Lothians. Harper was the first elected Green parliamentarian in the UK, and was the party’s convener from the time of that position’s creation in 1999 until 2002. He later served as one of its co-conveners from 2004–08.

The party made its first major breakthroughs at council level in the 2007 local elections, electing 8 councillors. In the 2012 local elections this was increased to 14. However, in May 2015, one of the party’s Glasgow councillors stepped down, reducing the number to 13. Another, from City of Edinburgh Council, stepped down in June of that year to focus on the2016 Scottish general election. To date, no Scottish Green Party councillor has lost their seat when contesting it at an election.

Prior to the 2007 elections, the Party had only ever elected one councillor at local level: in May 1990, Roger (aka Rory) Winter, representing the Highland Green Party (Uainich na Gàidhealtachd), was elected in Nairn as Scotland’s first Green regional councillor to the then Highland Regional Council. Cllr Winter broke away from the Greens in 1991 and continued his four-year term as an Independent Green Highlander.

Seeking to capitalise on the Greens’ success in the EP elections, a group named Green 2000 was established in July 1990, arguing for an internal reorganisation of the party in order to develop it into an effective electoral force capable of securing seats in the House of Commons.[23] Its proposed reforms included a more centralised structure, the replacement of the existing party council with a smaller party executive, and the establishment of delegate voting at party conferences.[24]Many party members opposed the reforms, believing that they would undermine the internal party democracy, and amid the arguments various key members resigned or were dismissed from the Greens.[25] Although Green 2000 proposals were defeated at the party’s 1990 conference, they were overwhelmingly carried at their 1991 conference, resulting in an internal restructuring of the party.[26] Between the end of 1990 and mid-1992, the party lost over half its members, with those polled indicating that frustration over a lack of clear and effective party leadership was a major reason in their decision.[27] The party fielded more candidates than it had ever done before in the 1992 general election but was widely deemed to have performed poorly.[28]

In 1993, the party adopted its “Basis for Renewal” program in an attempt to bring together conflicting factions and thus save the party from bankruptcy and potential demise.[29] The party sought to escape their reputation as an environmentalistsingle-issue party by placing greater emphasis on social policies.[30] Recognising their poor performance in the 1992 national elections, the party decided to focus on gaining support in local elections, targeting wards where there was a pre-existing support base of Green activists.[29] In 1993, future party leader and MP Caroline Lucas gained a seat onOxfordshire County Council,[31] with other gains following in the 1995 and 1996 local elections.[29]

The Greens sought to build alliances with other parties in the hope of gaining representation at the parliamentary level.[32]In Wales, the Greens endorsed Plaid Cymru candidate Cynog Dafis in the 1992 general election, having worked with him on a number of environmental initiatives.[32] For the 1997 general election, the Ceredigion branch of the Greens endorsed Dafis as a joint Plaid Cymru/Green candidate, but this generated controversy with the party, with critics believing it improper to build an alliance with a party that did not share all of the Greens’ views. In April 1995 the Green National Executive ruled that the party should withdraw from this alliance due to ideological differences.[32]

Caroline Lucas speaking as the first Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales at its autumn conference in 2008.

In November 2007, the party held an internal referendum to decide on whether it should replace its use of two “principal speakers”, one male and the other female, with the more conventional roles of “leader” and “deputy leader”; the motion passed with 73% of the vote.[38] In September 2008, the party then elected its first leader,Caroline Lucas,[38] with Adrian Ramsay elected deputy leader.[39] In the party’s first election with Lucas as leader, it retained both its MEPs in the 2009 European elections.[40]

In September 2014, The Green Party held its biennial leadership elections. Incumbent leader Natalie Bennett ran uncontested, and retained her status as party leader. The election also saw a change in the elective format for position of deputy leader. The party opted to elect two, gender-balanced deputy leaders, instead of just one. Amelia Womack andShahrar Ali won the two positions, succeeding former deputy leader Will Duckworth.[54][unreliable source?]

The party announced in October 2014 that Green candidates would be standing for parliament in at least 75% of constituencies in the 2015 General Election. In the 2010 General Election, they contested roughly 50% of seats.[55]Following its rapid increase in membership and support, the Green Party also announced it was targeting twelve key seats for the 2015 General Election. These seats were its one current seat, Brighton Pavilion, held by Caroline Lucas since 2010;Norwich South, a Liberal Democrat seat where June 2014 polling put the Greens in second place behind Labour;[56]Bristol West, another Liberal Democrat seat, where they are targeting the student vote; St. Ives, where they received an average of 18% of the vote in county elections; Sheffield Central; Liverpool Riverside; Oxford East; Solihull; Reading East; and three more seats with high student populations – York Central, Cambridge, and Holborn and St. Pancras, where leader Natalie Bennett is standing as the candidate.[57]

In December 2014, The Green Party announced that it had more than doubled its overall membership from 1 January that year to 30,809.[58] This reflected the increase seen in opinion polls in 2014, with Green Party voting intentions trebling from 2-3% at the start of the year, to 7-8% at the end of the year, on many occasions, coming in fourth place with YouGov‘s national polls, ahead of the Liberal Democrats, and gaining over 25% of the vote with 18 to 24-year-olds.[59][60] This rapid increase in support for the party is referred to by media as the “Green Surge”.[61][62][63] The hashtag “#GreenSurge” has also been popular on social media (such as Twitter) from Green Party members and supporters,[64] and as of 15 January 2015, the combined Green Party membership in the UK stood at 44,713; greater than the number of members of UKIP (at 41,943), and the Liberal Democrats (at 44,576).[65]

Polling subsequently fell back as the 2015 general election approached:[66] a Press Association poll of polls on 3 April, for example, put the Greens fifth with 5.4%.[67] However, membership statistics continued to surge with the party attaining 60,000 in England and Wales that April.

In the 2015 general election, Caroline Lucas was re-elected in Brighton Pavilion with an increased majority, and while failing to gain any additional seats, the Greens received their highest-ever vote share (over 1.1 million votes), and increased their national share of the vote from 1% to 3.8%.[68] Overnight, the membership numbers increased to over 63,000.[69] However they lost 9 out of their 20 seats on the Brighton and Hove council, losing minority control.[70] Nationwide, the Greens increased their share of councillors, gaining an additional 10 council seats while failing to gain overall control of any individual council.[71]

On 15 May 2016 Bennett announced she would not be standing for re-election in the party’s biennial leadership electiondue to take place in the summer.[72] Former leader Caroline Lucas and Work and Pensions Spokesperson Jonathan Bartleyannounced two weeks later that they intended to stand for leadership as a job share arrangement.[73] Nominations will close at the end of June, with the campaign period taking place in July and voting period in August, with the results to be announced at the party’s Autumn Conference in Birmingham from 2-4 September.

Sociologist Chris Rootes stated that the Green party took “the left-libertarian” vote.[2]The party wants an end to “big government” – which they see as hindering open and transparent democracy – and want to limit the power of “big business” – which, they argue, upholds the unsustainable trend of globalisation, and is detrimental to local trade and economies.[74]

The Party publishes a full set of its policies, as approved by successive party conferences,collectively entitled “Policies for a Sustainable Society” (originally “The Manifesto for a Sustainable Society” before February 2010).[75] This manifesto was summarised by LGBTIQ and human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell as “radical socialist”, “incorporat[ing] key socialist values” as it “rejects privatisation, free market economics and globalisation, and includes commitments to public ownership, workers’ rights, economic democracy, progressive taxation and the redistribution of wealth and power”.[76]

The ten core values set out by the Green Party policy document in February 2015 can be summarised as follows:[14]

Commitment to social justice and environmentalism, supporting a “radical transformation of society for the benefit of all, and for the planet as a whole”. The threats to economic, social and racial wellbeing are considered “part of the same problem”, and “solving one of these crises cannot be achieved without solving the others.”

Actions to “take account of the wellbeing of other nations, other species, and future generations”, not advancing “our well-being to the detriment of theirs”.

“Voluntary co-operation between empowered individuals in a democratic society, free from discrimination whether based on race, colour, gender, sexual orientation, religion, social origin or any other prejudice“, as the basis of a “healthy society”.

The party publishes a manifesto for each of its election campaigns.[75] In their most recent Election Manifesto, for the 2015 General Election, the Greens outlined many new policies, including a Robin Hood tax on banks, and a new 60% tax on those earning over £150,000.[78]

The party also states that it would phase out fossil fuel-based power generation, and would close all coal-fired power stations by 2023. The Green Party would also phase out nuclear power within ten years.

The party campaigns for the rights of indigenous people and argues for greater autonomy for these individuals. Furthermore, they support the granting of compensation and justice for historical wrongs, and that the reappropriation of lands and resources should also take place. The party also believes that the cancelling of international debt should take place immediately and any financial assistance should be in the form of grants and not loans, limiting debt service payments to 10% of export earnings per year.[74]

The party believes that environmental and social welfare should be prioritised over financial gain when it comes to regulating trade; a less “bully boy culture” from the Western world and more self sustainability in terms of food and energy policy on a global level, with aid only being given to countries as a last resort in order to prevent them from being indebted to their donors.[74]

The Green Party has an official “Drugs Group”, for drugs policy and research,[83] and the party has also considered decriminalising the recreational use of marijuana, considering the drugs issue a health, rather than criminal issue.[84] Ian Barnett from the Green Party says that: “The Policy of ‘War on Drugs’ has clearly failed. We need a different approach towards the control and misuse of drugs.” However, the party does aim to minimise drug use due to the negative effects on the individual and society at large.[85]

Notably this meant that the group had elected a transgender person to the position of chair for the first time.[87]

The group had a specific LGBTIQ manifesto for the 2015 elections, which was called Equality for All.[88] In it, the party has called for all teachers to be trained on LGBTIQ issues (such as “provid[ing] mandatory HIV, sex, and relationships education – age appropriate and LGBTIQ-inclusive – in all schools from primary level onwards”), to reform the system of pensions, of end the “spousal veto” and to “make equal marriage truly equal”. Natalie Bennett has also voiced support forpolygamy and polyamorous relationships.[89]

The Green Party supports same-sex marriage and has considered expelling a member (Christina Summers) as she was not supportive of governmental same-sex marriage legislation due to her religious beliefs.[90]

The party campaigns for greater accountability in global governance, with the United Nations made up of elected representatives and more regional representation, as opposed to the current nation-based setup. They want democratic control of the global economy with the World Trade Organisation, International Monetary Fund and World Bank reformed, democratised or even replaced. The party also wishes to prioritise social and environmental sustainability as a global policy.[74]

The Green Party states that they believe there is “no place in government for the hereditary principle”,[92] while Natalie Bennett has said that she supports an abolition of the monarchy as the head of state, and fully supports replacing the monarchy with a republic.[93]

The party favours a “three yeses” approach to Europe: “yes to a referendum, yes to major EU reform and yes to staying in a reformed Europe”. Natalie Bennett also added that:

‘Yes to the EU’ does not mean we are content with the union continuing to operate as it has in the past. There is a huge democratic deficit in its functioning, a serious bias towards the interests of neoliberalism and ‘the market’, and central institutions have been overbuilt. But to achieve those reforms we need to work with fellow EU members, not try to dictate high handedly to them, as David Cameron has done.[96]

Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb, the Green representative in the House of Lords, backed her support for Vote Leave, an organisation campaigning to leave the European Union in the forthcoming referendum.[97] However, Jones withdrew her support for the organisation following its decision to appoint Lord Lawson as its chair, tweeting that she “Will vote to Leave EU but can’t work with an organisation with so little judgement as to put Lawson at its head.”[98]

The Constitution of the Green Party of England and Wales governs all of the party’s activities, from the selection of election candidates by local parties, to nominations for the House of Lords, and so on. The Constitution states “openness, accountability and confidentiality” in its decision-making guidelines. It can be amended by a two-thirds majority vote at a Conference or by a two-thirds majority in a ballot of the membership.[99]

The Green Party of England and Wales holds a spring and an autumn conference every year. The autumn conference is the party’s “supreme forum”, with elections to the Green Party Executive (GPEx), committees and other bodies; the conference held in the spring, although having the same powers as the autumn conference on policy and organisational votes, holds elections only for vacant posts, and can have its priorities decided by the preceding autumn conference.[99]

A referendum of the party membership in 2007 on the question of creating a Leader and Deputy Leader – or, if candidates choose to run together and are gender balanced, Co-Leaders without a Deputy Leader – passed by 73%. The leaders would be elected every two years, instead of annually, and would be able to vote on the GPEx.[100]

The Green Party had in the past chosen not to have a single leader for ideological reasons; its organisation provided for two Principal Speakers, a male and female Principal Speaker, who sat but did not vote on GPEx. The final Principal Speakers were Lucas,[101] Siân Berry, and Derek Wall.[102]

GPEx positions are elected annually by postal ballot or by a vote at conference, depending on the number of candidates. To become a member of the Executive, the candidate must have been a member of the party for at least two years, or, if the candidate has been a member for one complete year preceding the date of close of nominations, their nomination will be allowed if it is supported by a majority of Green Party Regional Council (GPRC) members in attendance at a quorate official GPRC meeting.

GPRC is a body that coordinates discussions between Regional Green Parties. It supports the Executive (GPEx) and is responsible for interim policy statements between Conferences and enforcing constitutional procedures.[99]

Each Regional Green Party elects two members by postal ballot to be sent to the GPRC. These delegates’ terms last two years before re-election. GPRC meets at least four times a year. The Council elects male and female Co-Chairs and a Secretary. GPEx members are often required to give reports on their area of responsibility to the GPRC; the GPRC also has the power to recall any member of GPEx (by a two-thirds majority vote), who is then suspended until a re-election for the post is held; similarly, if GPEx suspends one of its own members, GPRC has the authority to decide whether that member should be reinstated or not (again, by a two-thirds majority vote).[99]

According to accounts filed with the Electoral Commission, for the year ending 31 December 2010 the party had an income of £770,495 with expenditure of £889,867.[105] Membership increased rapidly in 2014, more than doubling in that year.[106]On 15 January 2015, the Green Party claimed that the combined membership of the UK Green parties (Green Party of England and Wales, Scottish Green Party, and Green Party in Northern Ireland) had risen to 43,829 members, surpassingUKIP‘s membership of 41,966, and making it the third-largest UK-wide political party in the UK in terms of membership.[107][108] On 14 January 2015, UK newspaper The Guardian had reported that membership of the combined UK Green Parties was closing on those of UKIP and the Liberal Democrats, but noted that it lagged behind that of theScottish National Party (SNP), which has a membership of 92,187 members but is not a UK-wide party.[109]

“Green voters have tended to be younger and better educated than the electorate at large, and they are known to be more likely than most voters to work in thepublic sector. In terms of values, Green voters have been found to be more often than not on the left of the political spectrum, and they have been more likely than the average voter to hold post-materialist values, including support for environmental protection.”

According to political scientist Sarah Birch, the Green Party draws support from “a wide spectrum of the population”.[123] In 1995, sociologist Chris Rootes stated that the Green Party “appeals disproportionately to younger, highly educated professional people” although noted that this support base was “not predominantly urban”.[124] In 2009, Birch noted that the Green’s strongest areas of support were Labour-held seats in university towns or urban areas with relatively large student populations.[125] She noted that there were also strong correlations between areas of high Green support and high percentages of people who define themselves as having no religion.[126]

Sarah Birch noted that sociological polling revealed a “strong relationship” between individuals having voted for the Liberal Democrats in the past and holding favourable views of the Green Party, thus noting that the two groups were competing for “similar sorts of voters”.[127]

A map showing the representation of the Green Party at various levels of English local government as of May 2014. Counties, including Greater London, are in light green; districts, boroughs, and unitary authorities are in dark green.

Since the first UK election to the European Parliament with proportional representation, in 1999, the Green Party of England and Wales has had representation in the European Parliament. From 1999 to 2010, the two MEPs wereJean Lambert (London) and Caroline Lucas (South East England). In 2010, on election to the House of Commons, Lucas resigned her seat and was succeeded by Keith Taylor. In 2014, Taylor and Lambert held their seats, and were joined byMolly Scott Cato who was elected in the South West region, increasing the number of Green Party Members of the European Parliament to three for the first time.[132]

The youth wing of the Green Party, the Young Greens (of England and Wales), has developed independently from around 2002, and is for all Green Party members aged 18 to 30 years old. The Young Greens have their own constitution, national committee, campaigns and meetings, and have become an active presence at Green Party Conferences and election campaigns. There are now many Young Greens groups on UK university, college and higher-education institution campuses. Many Green Party councillors are Young Greens, as are some members of GPEx and other internal party organs.[134]

Several active groups within the party are designed to address certain areas of policy or representation. These include theGreen Party Trades Union Group,[135] The Green Economics Policy Working Group, the Monetary Reform Policy Working Group,[136] and others. The historical centrist faction known as Green 2000 sought to achieve a Green Party government by the year 2000; the group fell apart in the early 1990s.

The Green Left group, nicknamed The Watermelons, represents some of the anti-capitalists, eco-socialists “and other radicals” in the party who want to engage with the broader left-wing political movements in the UK, and attract left-wingactivists to the Green Party, according to the Launch Statement of Green Left, published in 2006.[137]

The Wales Green Party (WGP; Welsh: Plaid Werdd Cymru) is a semi-autonomouspolitical party within the Green Party of England and Wales. It covers Wales, and is the only regional party with autonomous status within the GPEW. The WGP contests elections for the National Assembly for Wales (as well as at the local, UK and European level) and has its own newsletters, membership list, AGMs and manifesto. Members of the WGP are automatically members of the GPEW. The WGP leader is Pippa Bartolotti,[138] and the Deputy Leader is Anthony Slaughter.[139] Wales is represented internally within the GPEW by Chris Simpson and Chris Carmichael on the Green Party Regional Council. Both sets of positions are directly elected by postal ballot. Wales-wide decisions are taken by the Wales Green Party Council made up of the spokespeople, senior officers, and a representative from each local party.

The Wales Green Party (WGP; Welsh: Plaid Werdd Cymru) is a semi-autonomouspolitical party within the Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW). It covers Wales, and is the only regional party with autonomous status within the GPEW.

The current Leader is Alice Hooker-Stroud [140] and the current Deputy Leader is Hannah Pudner .[141] Wales is represented internally within the GPEW by Chris Simpson and Chris Carmichael on the Green Party Regional Council(GPRC). Both sets of positions are directly elected by postal ballot.

Election of a new leader is due to take place in December 2015; there are three candidates: current deputy leader Anthony Slaughter, Alice Hooker-Stroud and Ashley Wakeling.[142]

The Green Parties in the United Kingdom have their roots in the PEOPLE movement which was founded in 1972. This became the Ecology Party three years later, and then the Green Party in 1985. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each had separate branches. In 1990, the Scottish and Northern Irish branches left the UK Greens to form separate parties. The English and Welsh parties became the Green Party of England and Wales, with the Welsh branch being semi-autonomous.[143] At the 1992 general election, local Greens entered an electoral alliance with Plaid Cymru in the constituency of Ceredigion and Pembroke North. The alliance was successful with Cynog Dafis being returned in a surprise result as the MP, defeating the Liberal Democrat incumbent by over 3,000 votes.[144][145] The agreement broke down by 1995 following disagreement within the Welsh Green Party over endorsing another party’s candidate, though Dafis would go on to serve in parliament as a Plaid Cymru member until 2000, and in the National Assembly of Wales from 1999 until 2003. Dafis later stated that he did not consider himself to be the “first Green MP”.[146]

The Wales Green Party has always had its own spokesperson (now referred to as leader). Jake Griffiths became leader in 2009.[147] Pippa Bartolotti was elected to succeed him in 2011. Followed by Alice Hooker-Stroud.[148] Anthony Slaughter became deputy leader in 2014.[14